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Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships

The company periodically contracts for the building of new ships to add to its fleet. Typically, each ship is separately designed with its own unique specifications and would therefore usually not be exactly similar to any other ship. Once a ship has been built, classification thereof will be sought...

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Main Author: Kotze, Johan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Centre for Law and Society 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kotze, Johan
author_browse Kotze, Johan
author_facet Kotze, Johan
author_sort Kotze, Johan
collection Thesis
description The company periodically contracts for the building of new ships to add to its fleet. Typically, each ship is separately designed with its own unique specifications and would therefore usually not be exactly similar to any other ship. Once a ship has been built, classification thereof will be sought through one of the classification societies such as Lloyds Register of Shipping, Nippon Kaiji Kyokai, etc. to determine the class of the ship concerned. This is essential for insurance purposes and without such classification the ship would simply not be allowed to trade internationally. Although there are certain international and other regulations or industry practices governing the specification of ships, it is nevertheless up to each shipowner and his appointed naval architects and shipyards to decide on the specifications for any ship that is to be built. The ship classification societies referred to above would typically recommend that certain minimum safety equipment and spares be carried aboard any ship for the purpose of safety at sea, but do not prescribe what these should be. Each ship operator, such as this company, based on its risk profile, decides what safety equipment and spares will form part of the ship. Typically, the type of safety equipment and spares that might be included in a ship are those whose absence, if required urgently at sea, could endanger the Jives of crew or the operational safety of the ship, and would usually include: Spare anchor and chain Critical bearings, valves and pumps Spare cylinder and cylinder sleeve Propeller and tail shaft Seals, wires and pipes The components required for the construction of a ship may be supplied either by shipyard under the construction contract or by the company as so-called "Buyers' Supplies". All such costs incurred are aggregated to determine the cost of the ship.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:49:02.124Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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publisher Centre for Law and Society
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42926 Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships Kotze, Johan Ships Safety Insurance The company periodically contracts for the building of new ships to add to its fleet. Typically, each ship is separately designed with its own unique specifications and would therefore usually not be exactly similar to any other ship. Once a ship has been built, classification thereof will be sought through one of the classification societies such as Lloyds Register of Shipping, Nippon Kaiji Kyokai, etc. to determine the class of the ship concerned. This is essential for insurance purposes and without such classification the ship would simply not be allowed to trade internationally. Although there are certain international and other regulations or industry practices governing the specification of ships, it is nevertheless up to each shipowner and his appointed naval architects and shipyards to decide on the specifications for any ship that is to be built. The ship classification societies referred to above would typically recommend that certain minimum safety equipment and spares be carried aboard any ship for the purpose of safety at sea, but do not prescribe what these should be. Each ship operator, such as this company, based on its risk profile, decides what safety equipment and spares will form part of the ship. Typically, the type of safety equipment and spares that might be included in a ship are those whose absence, if required urgently at sea, could endanger the Jives of crew or the operational safety of the ship, and would usually include: Spare anchor and chain Critical bearings, valves and pumps Spare cylinder and cylinder sleeve Propeller and tail shaft Seals, wires and pipes The components required for the construction of a ship may be supplied either by shipyard under the construction contract or by the company as so-called "Buyers' Supplies". All such costs incurred are aggregated to determine the cost of the ship. 2026-03-02T09:36:01Z 2026-03-02T09:36:01Z 1999 2026-03-02T09:32:15Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42926 en eng application/pdf Centre for Law and Society Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Ships
Safety
Insurance
Kotze, Johan
Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
title_full Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
title_fullStr Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
title_full_unstemmed Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
title_short Insurance spares, safety equipment and spare parts on ships
title_sort insurance spares safety equipment and spare parts on ships
topic Ships
Safety
Insurance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42926
work_keys_str_mv AT kotzejohan insurancesparessafetyequipmentandsparepartsonships